Guangdong private firms' export hits US$7.78b By Zheng Caixiong (China Daily) Updated: 2004-07-15 09:51
Guangdong Customs statistics released yesterday have revealed that
Guangdong's export volume from private companies and foreign-funded firms
registered strong growth in the first six months of this year.
Export volume from private companies reached US$7.78 billion between January
and June, up 87.5 per cent compared with the same period in 2003, while exports
from foreign-funded firms rose by 29.1 per cent, totalling US$51.95 billion.
Demonstrating the major role played by foreign capital in the provincial
economy, foreign-funded firms' exports now account for 62.7 per cent of the
Guangdong's total.
But the province's State-owned enterprises exported a total of US$19.72
billion of products, up just year-on-year 4.6 per cent, 23.8 per cent of the
province's total.
Provincial customs official Wu Sihai said the non-State sectors' good export
performance had helped the southern province reach a total import and export
volume of US$159.29 billion in the first half of this year, a year-on-year rise
of 28 per cent.
Guangdong's foreign trade volume represented 30.5 per cent of the national
total in the first six months of this year.
The province's export volume stood at US$82.87 billion, while imports were
US$76.42 billion, year-on-year rises of 26 per cent and 30.2 per cent.
Guangdong's exports to Hong Kong, the United States, the European Union (EU),
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), South Korea and the Middle
East all enjoyed increases of at least 20 per cent during the first six months
of 2004.
Wu revealed that Guangdong, the province which has conducted the greatest
amount of foreign trade for the past two decades, met 51.6 per cent of its
annual export target by the end of June.
And it notched up a US$6.45 billion foreign trade surplus in the January-June
period.
But factors including worsening trade conflicts may prevent the continue fast
growth of the province's exports in the second half of this year, Wu warned.
Guangdong had planned to reach an export volume of more than US$165 billion
this year.
Guangdong's prawn exports could drop rapidly after the United States imposed
anti-dumping taxes on Chinese prawns.
Guangdong is the nation's biggest prawn producer, with its annual prawn
exports making up more than 50 per cent of the national total.
Government departments has urged local prawn breeders to try to increase
their sales to South Korea, Japan and other neighbouring nations and regions.
Affected by trade protectionism, Guangdong's exports of garments and genuine
leather products to the EU have witnessed a drop of more than 20 per cent in the
first five months this year, Wu said.
Guangdong's exports may also suffer from global price rises in crude oil,
coal and other energy resources.
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